PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Taurine provides neuroprotection against retinal ganglion cell degeneration.

  • Nicolas Froger,
  • Lucia Cadetti,
  • Henri Lorach,
  • Joao Martins,
  • Alexis-Pierre Bemelmans,
  • Elisabeth Dubus,
  • Julie Degardin,
  • Dorothée Pain,
  • Valérie Forster,
  • Laurent Chicaud,
  • Ivana Ivkovic,
  • Manuel Simonutti,
  • Stéphane Fouquet,
  • Firas Jammoul,
  • Thierry Léveillard,
  • Ryad Benosman,
  • José-Alain Sahel,
  • Serge Picaud

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0042017
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 10
p. e42017

Abstract

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Retinal ganglion cell (RGC) degeneration occurs in numerous retinal diseases leading to blindness, either as a primary process like in glaucoma, or secondary to photoreceptor loss. However, no commercial drug is yet directly targeting RGCs for their neuroprotection. In the 70s, taurine, a small sulfonic acid provided by nutrition, was found to be essential for the survival of photoreceptors, but this dependence was not related to any retinal disease. More recently, taurine deprivation was incriminated in the retinal toxicity of an antiepileptic drug. We demonstrate here that taurine can improve RGC survival in culture or in different animal models of RGC degeneration. Taurine effect on RGC survival was assessed in vitro on primary pure RCG cultures under serum-deprivation conditions, and on NMDA-treated retinal explants from adult rats. In vivo, taurine was administered through the drinking water in two glaucomatous animal models (DBA/2J mice and rats with vein occlusion) and in a model of Retinitis pigmentosa with secondary RGC degeneration (P23H rats). After a 6-day incubation, 1 mM taurine significantly enhanced RGCs survival (+68%), whereas control RGCs were cultured in a taurine-free medium, containing all natural amino-acids. This effect was found to rely on taurine-uptake by RGCs. Furthermore taurine (1 mM) partly prevented NMDA-induced RGC excitotoxicity. Finally, taurine supplementation increased RGC densities both in DBA/2J mice, in rats with vein occlusion and in P23H rats by contrast to controls drinking taurine-free water. This study indicates that enriched taurine nutrition can directly promote RGC survival through RGC intracellular pathways. It provides evidence that taurine can positively interfere with retinal degenerative diseases.